Posts Tagged ‘violence’
18 Oct
Satireday on Eco-Crap
27 Sep
Make you Fink on Friday
Two stories today, both different, but both could lead to our extinction.
A vicious circle, climate change apparently increases violence, and traits like selfishness are not valued in evolution…
Firstly, violence.
Rise in violence ‘linked to climate change’

The researchers believe that war and personal conflicts are links to shifts in climate
Shifts in climate are strongly linked to increases in violence around the world, a study suggests.
US scientists found that even small changes in temperature or rainfall correlated with a rise in assaults, rapes and murders, as well as group conflicts and war.
The team says with the current projected levels of climate change, the world is likely to become a more violent place.
Read more on BBC
Selfish traits not favoured by evolution, study shows
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Humans and animals could not evolve in a co-operative environment by being selfish, scientists say
Evolution does not favour selfish people, according to new research.
This challenges a previous theory which suggested it was preferable to put yourself first.
Instead, it pays to be co-operative, shown in a model of “the prisoner’s dilemma”, a scenario of game theory – the study of strategic decision-making.
Published in Nature Communications, the team says their work shows that exhibiting only selfish traits would have made us become extinct.
Read more on BBC
Two seemingly linked theories, one that man is affecting climate change and that that climate change can lead to a rise in violence, two, that selfishness and that means to me meanness and violence as well, are not favoured by Mother Nature.
If this is the case, are we not the authors of our own demise?
A paradox.
19 Aug
Monday Moaning
Soda – Soft Drinks, depends whether you are American or British, but that is immaterial, the question is what are they doing to our kids?
We have long known that soft drinks/soda are contributing to the current epidemic of obesity.
With ‘light‘ or ‘diet‘ drinks being the worst offenders; which just begs the question, why do so many people drink this shit?
There is new evidence coming to light. Evidence that soda/soft drinks are more evil, much more evil than imagined.
We have become preoccupied with conditions like ADHD (which I have just read is a hoax condition – for another time) and things like inattention at school, juvenile violence levels manifesting at kindergarten level, and worsening in the teens.
But there are definite suspicions as a result of an inconclusive survey by Columbia University epidemiologist Shakira Suglia and her colleagues that the culprit may well be our beloved sodas and soft drinks.
Read this article: Soft drinks’ side effects on Stuff.co.nz
And tell me, that we should be banning these products outright from our children’s diets. In fact governments should be banning these drinks from the young, just like they ban smoking.
Soda was once a luxury, you had a can maybe once a week, I was allowed one 7oz bottle of Coca-Cola on Saturdays; if I had behaved myself during the week.
But today, it is part of our kids food chain, a daily routine, sometimes more, a lot more than one can/bottle a day.
Our kids are overdosing on soda, it’s become a drug, its addictive. A recent case in NZ where a woman died drinking (to excess) Coca-Cola. That’s not a fantasy, it was a decision of the coroner’s court.
As a parent I want you to think about it, seriously. Is your child’s behaviour aggressive, or in any way manifesting some form of antisocial behaviour? Is he/she possibly a bully? Does he/she get irritable? Do they show an attention deficit? Have there been complaints from school about his/her general behaviour?
Okay… now measure that against their intake of soda – BE HONEST!
Do you see a relationship?
There is a solution! BAN SODA AND SOFT DRINKS.
I have. I have returned to water.
30 Sep
Make you Fink on Friday
Normally Make you Fink on Friday is a moan and a bitch session, but today not. In fact it is a collection of good news.
Belo Monte Dam on the Xingú River in Brazil

Turning this river into that lake
The Brazilian government was moving ahead “at any cost” with plans to build the third-largest dam in the world and one of the Amazon’s most controversial development projects – the Belo Monte dam on the Xingu River in the state of Pará.

Drowning hundreds of communities like this displacing 50,000 people
The Belo Monte dam complex dates back to Brazil’s military dictatorship and the government has attempted to build it through various series of national investment programs including Brasil em Ação and the Program to Accelerate Growth. Original plans to dam the Xingu have been greenwashed through multiple public relations programs over the course of two decades in the face of intense national and international protest.
Yesterday:
A judge in Brazil has ordered a halt to construction of a multi-billion-dollar dam project in the Amazon region.
Judge Carlos Castro Martins barred any work that would interfere with the natural flow of the Xingu river.
He ruled in favour of a fisheries group which argued that the Belo Monte dam would affect local fish stocks and could harm indigenous families who make a living from fishing.
The government says the dam is crucial to meeting growing energy needs.
Judge Martins barred the Norte Energia company behind the project from “building a port, using explosives, installing dikes, building canals and any other infrastructure work that would interfere with the natural flow of the Xingu river, thereby affecting local fish stocks”.
Judge Desterro said the Brazilian environmental agency, Ibama, had approved the project without ensuring that 29 environmental conditions had been met.
Sources: BBC News & Positive TV Read more.
Burma dam: Work halted on divisive Myitsone project
Burma’s president has suspended construction of a controversial Chinese-backed hydroelectric dam.

Myitsone Project - Power for China
In a letter read out in parliament on Friday, Thein Sein said the $3.6bn (£2.3bn) Myitsone dam was contrary to the will of the people.
The project fuelled fighting between the army and ethnic Kachin rebels.
Pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who recently joined the anti-dam campaign, welcomed the move, seen as a rare victory for social activists.
The BBC’s South East Asia correspondent Rachel Harvey says it appears to be further evidence of the new leadership’s desire to seek legitimacy by being more open to public opinion.
Source: BBC News Read more
Bolivian President Evo Morales has suspended work on the road until a referendum is held.
However, a national furore over the construction has continued.

Half a million trees to fall through Indian territory (TIPNIS). Endangered and endemic species are found in the area to be deforested.
The proposed 300km (190-mile) road, financed by Brazil, would link Brazil to Pacific ports in Chile and Peru.
But it will also pass through an Amazon nature reserve that is home to about 50,000 people from three different indigenous groups.
About 1,000 protesters were staging a 500km (310-mile) march to the main city La Paz when riot police stopped them in the Yucumo region on Sunday.

Bolivians march against Evo Morales over jungle highway crackdown
Evo Morales was forced to reverse the decision to continue in the light of three government ministers resigning over the violence involved.
Source: BBC News, here too & Blue Channel 24 Read more
Opinion:
I am pleased with all this good news; it is beginning to show governments that the people want a say in the future. Governments have forgotten this, they have forgotten that they represent the people.
Hopefully, these projects can be resolved amicably.
I was particularly pleased with Burma’s decision, it has shown that the change of government is maybe leading the country on a better path after more than 30 years of dictatorship.
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